One day after LGBT legal groups filed a lawsuit challenging North Carolina’s new anti-LGBT law, more than 80 businesses — including tech giants Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, IBM Corporation, and Intel — are urging the state’s Republican leadership to repeal House Bill 2.

In a letter drafted by the Human Rights Campaign and Equality North Carolina, a broad coalition of business leaders express “concerns” about the legislation that has “sanctioned discrimination across North Carolina,” repealed all existing LGBT nondiscrimination protections in the state, and placed transgender people at greater risk for violence, in addition to possibly threatening federal funding for schools throughout the state.

“Discrimination is wrong, and we believe it has no place in North Carolina or anywhere in our country,” the letter continues. “As companies that pride ourselves on being inclusive and welcoming to all, we strongly urge … the leadership of North Carolina’s legislature to repeal this law in the upcoming legislative session.”

The letter is addressed to North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory, a Republican who signed HB 2 the same day it was introduced and rushed through a special legislative session on March 23.

The law was drafted in response to a Charlotte ordinance that sought to guarantee equal access for transgender people to public restrooms and locker rooms that correspond with their gender identity. McCrory, however, has continued to peddle the false, transphobic claim that such LGBT-inclusive policies laws allow sexual predators to gain access to women’s restrooms.

The signatories on the letter, sent to the state capitol in Raleigh today, read like a who’s-who of major tech, entertainment, and travel companies nationwide. The leaders urging North Carolina to repeal its unprecedented law include out Apple CEO Tim Cook, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft president Brad Smith, Yahoo president and CEO Melissa Meyer, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, and Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, in addition to many others.